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cytzol | 4 years ago
This is not quite true.
The TOLA bill does allow the Australian government to compel an employee to break their product's encryption — which, yes, is dumb as hell. But Fastmail does not offer end-to-end encryption. As an Australian company, they already have had to comply with a court warrant asking them to surrender data; in other words, law enforcement does not need them to install a backdoor when they already have a front door. Your comment implies that TOLA made Fastmail less secure somehow, but this has been the case long before TOLA; the existence of that bill changes nothing.
I feel like it's important to point this out, not for the sake of pedantry, but to say that if you want truly secure encrypted e-mail, you must be in control of the encryption and decryption step, rather that having a company do that for you — you can't assume you'll be safe just because your provider isn't based in Australia. It's been a while since I've looked, but I think it would be very hard to find an e-mail provider that explicitly says it won't hand over data when presented with a valid warrant.
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